
I have been reading Nietzsche again lately. He is sort of a guilty pleasure. I read him early of a morning with my coffee. This morning, I ran across this bon mot, “Intestinal morbidity.” He famously claimed at some point, “The spirit is like a stomach”. In his view, intestinal morbidity represents the failure to digest reality.
To Nietzsche, a healthy person can “swallow” even the most painful truths (the death of God, the cruelty of nature) and turn them into a strength. A morbid gut suffers from resentment. It’s a spirit that takes in experiences but can’t break them down. Instead of being converted into action, the experience sits and rots, poisoning the host with bitterness and envy. Here, I think, is the crux of the matter. Here is where I take my inspiration. It is better to live a life of gratitude than a life of resentment. But, to do this, it requires a life of intestinal fortitude.
Nietzsche’s comparison is apt. I think of the human gut, which processes food and emotional experience. The intestines, small and large (colon) do most of the work of assimilation, separating healthy nutrients from waste.
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When we have moved beyond the unspeakable affecting us, we have become, as Pink Floyd sings, “comfortably numb.” Do you see gratitude as the action of strength then?
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